At the spring meeting in Bartonsville, Neil Daniels brought up the idea of having VCBS name and contact information posted in each covered bridge. This
is a very good idea and will be pursued further. It might be possible to draft short informational messages about each bridge (date, builder, etc.) with
something like "for further information contact VCBS etc.", print and laminate these, and attach them to the interior of the bridge. Certainly an idea that
is worth a lot of thought. More on this at the fall meeting.

Bill Carroll, President VCBS

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The Election of Officers is Starting NOW!

With this newsletter issue, we begin the process of electing Society officers for two-year terms to begin January 1, 2014.

Starting with this, the Summer Issue of The Bridger, the Board of Directors is asking the Vermont Covered Bridge Society Membership for
candidates to run for the offices of president, vice president, secretary, and treasurer. Non-incumbent candidates are asked to introduce themselves to the
membership by letter to The Bridger and tell us why they are seeking a leadership role. The letters will be published in the Fall Issue of
The Bridger together with the ballot. Voters will return the ballots by November 30, the deadline for the Winter Issue in which the winners will
be announced. The incumbent officers will serve until midnight, December 31, 2013.

The Society bylaws governing elections was changed by the Board of Directors last February. The bylaws now state that if there are no challenging candidates
for any of the four offices, election ballots will not be issued and the Board of Directors will confirm the slate.

The cause of this change is the membership voting record. When incumbent officers are not challenged by new candidates, ballot returns have fallen off. In
the last election of approximately 200 ballots, only 14 were returned.

Every member in good standing is entitled to run for office and to vote. This includes the adult members listed on a Family membership and the contact person
on a Business or Organization/Municipality membership.

This is an open organization and all members are encouraged to participate, giving of their time and talent. If you don't want to run for one of the four
offices, volunteer to join the board of directors by chairing a standing committee or a Bridge-watch area. Also, please see the "Important Notice" elsewhere in
this issue.

The VCBS handbook has been updated to include the changes made by the Vermont Covered Bridge Society Board of Directors annual meeting in February 2012,
and is now available in either PDF or printed form.

The handbook describes the VCBS Agenda, or reason for being; VCBS organization, including the objectives of the Standing Committees and the makeup of the
Board of Directors. Also described is the membership expense policy and a printable copy of the expense account form.

The Fourteenth Annual Spring meeting of the Vermont Covered Bridge Society was held in the Bartonsville Grange in Bartonsville, Vermont on Saturday,
April 27, 2013.

President Bill Carroll called the meeting to order at 10:05AM. Nineteen members and guests were in attendance.

Minutes:

A motion to not have the reading of minutes of the Annual Fall meeting held in Middlebury on September 29, 2012 was made by Ray
Hitchcock and seconded by John Weaver. Motion passed. Meeting minutes are always available for reading on the VCBS web site and are published in the issue of
The Bridger following the meeting.

Treasurer's Report:

As of March 8, 2013 Neil Daniels, Treasurer, reports the following Income Statement; for the period January 01, 2012 thru December 31, 2012:

Income

Donations:

$ 395.00

Dues:

$ 630.00

Events:

$ 164.00

Sales:

$ 133.00

Total income:

$1,322.00

Director's Grants - Arlington Green Bridge

$2,251.00

Postage, printing (Bridger)

$ 508.00

Events

$ 355.00

Office Expense

$ 86.00

Total expenses:

$3,200.00

Transfer to save-a bridge fund

$ 583.00

Total outflows:

$3,783.00

Income less expense:

--$2461.00

PORTFOLIO GAIN IN 2012: 6.79%

Balance Sheet

Union Bank (Morrisville, VT) Checking:

$5,404.00

01-01-12

$2,943.00

12-31-12

--$2,416.00

Change in balance

Save-A-Bridge Fund:

$6,123.00

01-01-12

Value

$ 583.00

03-09-12

Added

$ 455.00

2012

Stock gains

N/A

12-31-12

Value

$7,161.00

01-26-13

Cash Value

Motion to accept the Treasurer's Report was made by John Weaver and seconded by Ray Hitchcock. Motion passed.

Committee Reports:

Membership:

Read by Joe Nelson in absence of Membership Chair Suzanne Daniels:

Please join me in welcoming new members to our Society, all of whom joined us since our last annual fall meeting: Edward
Lowe of Assonet, MA; Merrilyn Towne of San Diego, CA; Joseph and Diane Charles, Jr of Granville, OH; and Wendy Payson of Southampton, MA.

Many thanks to our members who participated in our Annual Renewal Drawing by sending in their dues before the December 31st
deadline. As in years past, Ruth Nelson's first grade reading group drew the winners: Robert McPherson of Akron, OH and Robert Page of Brattleboro, VT.
Robert McPherson chose the book Spanning Time: Vermont's Covered Bridges as his prize and Robert Page chose the two-year free membership.

Our membership now stands at 140. Of these we have 19 who are behind in their dues. On the other hand, we have 5 members
who have paid ahead. (not including the contest winner) Of the 140 memberships, approximately half are Vermont residents. The rest of our membership hale
from New England to California and one in Canada.

The Membership Committee is in need of a volunteer to serve as Coordinator assisting the Membership Committee Chair. The
volunteer needs not be a resident of Vermont to maintain the membership roster and to serve as contact for the membership. To sign up for this position
contact Bill Carroll, wcarroll@crocker.com.

Historical Committee:

Bill Carroll looks after the VCBS archives on every covered bridge in Vermont. He reports that there are "dribs and drabs"
of information on every bridge at libraries and at colleges.

Communication:

Joe Nelson, Chair, reports of the 140 members, 39 have opted to receive their newsletters electronically, saving the VCBS
$70.26 in postage per year and approximately $102.96 in printing costs per year. The newsletter costs $0.66 per issue to print, fold and tape.

Our new newsletter editor, Bill Caswell, who took over from Ray Hitchcock, produced the Spring 2013 edition of The Bridger
in great form. We thank Bill and Ray for their excellent work on our newsletter. The Bridger is key in the Vermont Covered Bridge Society's outreach in
promoting the preservation of our covered bridges.

Neil Daniels and I are leading a "5-week" (5 Thursdays) course on covered bridges at the Institute for Lifelong Education at
Dartmouth College (ILEAD). We have 17 students signed up and we plan to make our VCBS brochures available to them. Last week we invited them to our Annual
Spring meeting in Bartonsville.

We still need reporters/correspondents to bring covered bridge news to The Bridger with on-the-scene reports, photos and/or
newspaper clippings. We find it embarrassing to be scooped on covered bridge news by organizations other than ourselves.

For more information or to sign up, please contact Joe Nelson.

Also wanted: Vermont Covered Bridge clippings from your local newspaper. Please send them to Joe at PO Box 267, Jericho, VT
05465 or to jcnelson@together.net. He will share them with our newsletter and with our Historical Committee.

Publicity:

Chair Ellen Everitz has researched and assembled a media directory covering most of the state of Vermont. The directory
includes newspapers, radio, and television. (Ray Hitchcock recently added three more listings covering the Bartonsville area.)

A lifetime member since May 2000, Ellen is available to publicize our annual meetings and events. She may be contacted at
calamity99@netzero.com or 802.951.9697.

Bridge Watch:

John Weaver reports:

Taftsville: A drive by of the bridge on Labor Day showed that the west abutment was lost by the tropical storm Irene damage. East
abutment will need repairs as well. The superstructure has many members needing to be replaced.

Quinlan: A steel system beneath is being installed.

Scott: At the moment the Scott bridge is under Hoyle/Tanner contract to be stabilized.

Longley: At a meeting in Montpelier it was decided it would be replaced by a new covered bridge.

Archives:

No report

A motion to accept the committee reports was made by Joe Nelson and seconded by Bill Caswell. Motion passed.

Old Business:

Irene Barna asked about the status of a previous effort to have covered bridge signage throughout the state. The recollection
reported was that the covered bridge icon-signs hoped to be created and attached to existing weight limit signs proved to be cost prohibitive. Contact had
been made with the state and the legislature where it was learned that any signs had to be in compliance with state regulations and the icons did not fit
the categories in place. Cost was also a determining factor. As a result, a posted weight limit sign might be the only indication that there could be a
covered bridge ahead. Bill Caswell told that funding for the signage for covered bridges in New Hampshire is collaboration between state and town resources.

New Business:

Neil Daniels requests to begin discussion for rack cards at Visitors Centers around the state. He gives an estimate of about
$200.00 as a likely cost. He will start working on a prototype: Printing -- 2 sides - folded - inviting readers to the VCBS web site. Neil plans to present
a brochure draft at the fall meeting. Ray volunteered to assist Neil in the creation of this project.

Discussion that followed was regarding postings in several Vermont bridges giving information about covered bridges in other
states; but not Vermont. To post any Vermont bridge information, acceptability of any legitimate posting should be worked out with the town in which a bridge
is located.

Neil Daniels mentioned that there is still a card posted in the Salmond bridge that he had posted ten years ago. The message
on the card is information about that bridge.

Sandy Herliczek said, regarding an earlier mention of covered bridge archived materials; that there must be a collection of
archived bridge materials at universities.

Will Thompson asks if the VCBS will have an inclusion in the "Passports" given out at the History Expo. Note: The Vermont History
Expo in Tunbridge will be held in June 21 - 22, 2014.

Fall meeting site:

Several northern towns were suggested for sites for the fall meeting; but nothing was finalized.

Adjournment:

With no further discussion, a motion to adjourn was made by Joe Nelson and seconded by Adrienne Hitchcock.

A thank you to Ray Hitchcock for arranging the meeting site and all details regarding the meeting in Bartonsville.

After a brief break guest speaker Susan Hammond presented a very detailed slide presentation with commentary about the Bartonsville
Covered Bridge from its building in 1870 to its demise August 28, 2011 when the high, rushing waters of the Williams River, caused by Tropical Storm Irene,
washed out one abutment and the bridge sadly, but gracefully, was swept from its 141-year resting place. A brand-new replacement covered bridge updated for
the traffic of today was re-opened January 2013. A thank you to Susan for capturing the sad moment in August of 2011 and her much appreciated efforts to make
the replica of the 1870 bridge be in place today.

A thank you to Susan Hammond for her presentation today.

Respectfully submitted, Irene R. Barna, Secretary

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Taftsville Covered Bridge ProgressWGN 45-14-12by Jim Ligon

The reconstruction of the Taftsville Covered Bridge is coming along nicely. My guys worked right through the winter on this and they've done their usual
miracles in spite of the weather. Winter ended last night with snow, by the end of the week it'll be in the 90's. The "missing" half of the bridge is back in
place and the new roof extends almost all the way from River Road to the Route 4 side. We've left a small section open there for access by our stonework
contractor. Bruce Payne and his crew from P&P Landscaping again earn kudos for another covered bridge stonework restoration project well done. Bruce has done
a lot of stonework for us on covered bridges and I can't say enough good things about his work.

The work on the center pier is complete. We placed a concrete cap on top of the structure of stone laid up dry, added missing stone, tuck pointed the
surfaces, then consolidation-grouted the pier from the bottom up, filling huge voids in the existing stone pier, drilled nine holes 35' deep from the top down
into ledge rock and installed heavy steel anchor rods grouted deep into ledge rock. The rods get torqued to compress all the elements.

We began work on the east abutment to finish some exterior tuck-pointing. We'll consolidation grout it eleven feet out down the wings from the main structure,
as planned. The rest stays as-is.

The west abutment will be backfilled with a combination of stone, gravel, and for earth stabilization and erosion control, gabion baskets.

We've trimmed the laminated-plank arches on the west side and reattached them to our new concrete abutment. Pier attachments will start next week with
east abutment to follow. We then align the arches end to end and temporarily block them from the king posts. Once the bridge structure is released from the
staging and settled a bit we will then attach the arches to the king posts.

When the arch ends are moved to their new positions, we can begin installing over 6 miles of sub-decking, then over 2 miles of oak on top. When the deck
is complete, we'll install timber curbing to protect the trusses from moving traffic.

Unfortunately, we have been disassembling some of our finished new bridge framing to extract "original fabric" timbers found to be rotten by engineering
after samples were sent to a Boston lab for analysis.

[Jim Ligon is Project Superintendent for Alpine Construction LLC of New York]

Festivities will begin at 10 a.m. with the usual business meeting to conclude at 11 a.m. at which time our speaker, Scott Perry, will talk to us about
Montgomery and Montgomery's seven covered bridges. Mr. Perry is the chair of the Montgomery Historical Society, and a member of the Montgomery Select Board.

Further details about the meeting will be published in The Bridger fall issue, including a map, dining arrangements, and covered bridge tours.

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Humpback Bridge Lost to ArsonWGN 35-82-06

The covered bridge community experienced another tragic loss on June 6th when the Humpback Bridge in Vinton County, Ohio, burned. The State Fire
Marshall stated that the fire was set. The bridge had been bypassed and stood in a remote part of the county. Built in 1874, the 175', 3-span structure
crossed Raccoon Creek with an unusual double multiple king truss with arches.

Your editor and his wife were fortunate to have visited this bridge for the first time a mere three days before the fire.

Humpback Covered BridgePhoto by Jenn Caswell

Humpback Covered Bridge - Post FirePhoto by Bob Twyman

* * *

Cabin Creek Bridge Work UnderwayWGN 17-68-03

Photo by Bill CaswellJune 3, 2013

Arnold Graton is actively restoring the Cabin Creek Bridge in Lewis County, Kentucky. The bridge was originally built in 1873 by William Henderson as
a 114-foot, single span, multiple king post bridge, according to Patrick Kennedy, preservation officer in the Kentucky Heritage Council. It was closed in
1983 to foot and vehicle traffic, due to storm damage. It fell into disrepair after flood waters damaged more of the bridge. Graton has a year and a half
to complete the work, but he expects it to be completed before the end of this year.

* * *

Charlton Mill Bridge RazedWGN 35-29-16

Photo by Bill CaswellFebruary 27, 2009

In February of this year, the Charlton Mill covered bridge in Xenia, Ohio, was torn down without any public discussion, allegedly for public safety.
According to the Greene County engineering office, it is to be replaced with a "modern" covered bridge that "will maintain the look of an old covered bridge".
The design engineer, who was hired to repair the structure, was also on the committee that authorized the tear-down and is the designer for the new bridge,
said that the original was "too far gone" to repair. The Greene County engineering office said construction on the new bridge is expected to begin in June
of this year.

[Reported by Rob Mitchell, NSPCB Newsletter editor]

* * *

Second National Covered Bridge Conference

The Federal Highway Administration's National Historic Covered Bridge Preservation Program (NHCBP) sponsored the Second National Historic Covered Bridge
Conference in Dayton, Ohio, June 5-8, 2013.

The Dayton Conference featured presentations from some of the leading covered bridge engineers, scholars, and builders from across the United States,
China, Germany and Russia. The international guests included a large Chinese delegation representing the Wenzhou Lounge Bridge Cultural Society.

Jenn Caswell staffed a table for the National society with help from Bob Watts and Trish Kane. In addition to promoting the NSPCB, they handed VCBS
brochures to conference attendees who stopped at the table. Maybe that will result in a new member or two.

In addition to the numerous educational and informative presentations at the conference, timber framer Will Truax and crew were demonstrating traditional
covered bridge construction techniques by building a kingpost truss at a city park near the conference site.

The Longley Covered Bridge in Montgomery will be addressed with a replacement covered bridge. Design status of the replacement structure is very
preliminary at this time. The Longely Bridge is an 85' long Town lattice truss built by brothers Sheldon and Savannah Jewett in 1863.

* * *

Quinlan Covered Bridge RepairsWGN 45-04-03

The Quinlan covered bridge in Charlotte has been closed and is undergoing repairs. Deteriorating timber trusses
and wear on the joints of the arch-truss system have concerned town officials for several years about the ability of town
plow and sand trucks to continue to use the bridge. The bridge was built in 1849 and added to the National Register of
Historic Places in 1974. The project is expected to be completed before the end of the summer. Wright Construction is
the contractor.

* * *

Scott Bridge to be RepairedWGN 45-13-13

The Scott Covered Bridge in Townshend, which was shored up last year, is undergoing rehabilitation. Design for the project is just starting.

The bridge was named for Henry Scott, former landowner. It was built at a cost of $5200 to replace one lost in the 1869 flood. The former bridge was
south of the present one. A 166' Town lattice span crosses the river and two Kingpost spans cross the dry land adjacent to the river. Arches were later
added to the Town truss. At first, only the Town truss was covered. The kingpost spans were covered in 1873. The structure was deeded to the Vermont
Historic Sites Commission in 1955.

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The Way it Wasby Joe Nelson

It was an exciting time, the period between our founding in February 2000, and the summer issue of The Bridger in May 2001.

In Cambridge Junction in April, the "first phase" of the project to preserve the Poland Bridge, WGN 45-08-02, was nearly complete, to keep the bridge from
slumping into the Lamoille River. The second phase will restore the bridge to carry light traffic. The funds for the work came from the $10 million National
Historic Bridge Program announced by Senator James Jeffords last August. The $1 million provided for the Cambridge Junction Bridge was received by the Vermont
Agency of Transportation.

In Johnson on March 8, 2001, the Power House Covered Bridge, WGN 45-08-08, collapsed under a roof-load of heavy wet snow. The top-structure crashed down
onto the self-supporting bridge deck, the trusses thrown outward and into the Gihon River. Rescue crews rushed to clear the debris from the still-standing bridge
deck, not knowing if anyone was trapped beneath it. No one was.

Historically, the bridge-owning towns hired a person each year whose job was to "snow the bridge," putting snow on the bridge floor so sleighs could get
through. John Weaver, a Vermont Covered Bridge Society member and structural engineer for VTrans said that a person also was hired by the towns to see that
the bridge roofs were kept clear of snow, but the practice died out when most bridges became roofed with metal, which tends to shed snow. The Power House Bridge
used snow-retaining cedar shingles.

On May 30, it looked very much like Westford's Browns River Bridge, WGN 45-04-05, was beginning its final lap on the journey back to its rightful place; over
Browns River where it was built in 1837. An entire upper chord was replaced with several vertical posts, a tie beam, the portal sheathing and the roof have been
renewed. The last obstacle to completion are the abutments, one of which needs to be rebuilt.

The journey began in February 1987 when Westford residents called a special meeting to save the bridge and the Westford Historical Society was formed. One can
only wonder at the tenacity and dedication with which Caroline Brown and her team pursued their dream to restore this historic bridge.

The town of Danville got a $300,000 grant to repair the Greenbanks Hollow Covered Bridge, WGN 45-03-01. The grant was approved by the U.S. Department of
Transportation under the National Covered Bridge Preservation Act. The Danville bridge is one of two Vermont bridges selected for the preservation grants that
year; the other was the Sanderson Bridge in Brandon, WGN 45-11-02. In 2002, it was Thetford's Union Village Bridge, WGN 45-09-05 and Cambridge's Poland Bridge.

The Vermont Covered Bridge Society was invited Vermont Historical Society sponsored Expo 2001 held at the Tunbridge Fairgrounds in June. We have participated in
every Expo since.

Back then, the VCBS occupied an eight-foot booth in the Floral Building and staffed it from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. The society used this
opportunity to publicize its work in preserving our covered bridges with a slide show, brochures, newsletters, and discussion to recruit new members.

Our exhibition was assembled by members Ed Barna, Irene Odell (now Barna), me, and John Weaver with the support of Ruth Nelson and Bill McKone. We were
invited to exhibit at the Expo through the persistence and salesmanship of Irene Odell, then president of the Salisbury Historical Society. Thank you Irene.

We were asking for volunteers back then, too: Newsletter Editor: Requirements; Computer with e-mail address; Staff writer: Requirements: Computer with e-mail
address; Correspondents: Duties: Collect covered bridge stories from their home areas or travels and send them to the editor; Crafts Committee: To design covered
bridge greeting cards, Christmas cards, post cards and stationary, then oversee the manufacture and distribution of the products for the purpose of funding covered
bridge preservation.

We never did get a Crafts Committee volunteer.

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VCBS Lending Library: a Learning/Research Source

The Vermont Covered Bridge Society has set up a lending library available to all society members-in-good standing through media mail.

Librarian Warren Tripp has created a detailed book list complete with a description and critique of each book. Copies of the
index are available by mail, or you may contact Joe Nelson for an electronic copy at jcnelson@together.net.

A borrower can contact Warren Tripp who will send the book by Postal Service Media Mail. Books are returned the same way.

Send Warren the complete title of the book(s) you wish to borrow. He will respond with the mailing cost and mail the order when the fee is received.
The borrower is then responsible to return the item(s) in a reasonable time, preferably not more than two months.

Spanning Time: Vermont's Covered Bridges features 102 color photographs of Vermont's covered bridges in fifteen chapters, each a guided tour. The tours are
complete with maps, commentary on the uniqueness of each bridge, and historic highlights about the towns and villages in which the bridges stand.

An appendix provides: A Summary of Vermont's Covered Bridges, listing information on each; A Covered Bridge Glossary, describing the details of a
covered bridge; A Bridge Truss section, explaining how trusses work with drawings of the trusses used in Vermont; The Bridge Builders, providing
thumbnail biographies of people who designed and built the bridges; A Covered Bridge Reading List, for bridge and history buffs; A detailed Index. Spanning
Time: Vermont's Covered Bridges: 7" x 10", 288 pages. Published by New England Press at P.O. Box 575, Shelburne, VT 05482. Spanning Time is available directly from
the author for $39.00, free shipping. (Vermont residents add 6% sales tax)

Connecticut and Rhode Island Covered BridgesDuring their heyday in the mid to late 1800's, more than 150 covered bridges dotted
the landscape of Connecticut and Rhode Island. Since that time, floods, fires, and progress have claimed all but two of the historic structures. With over 200
images, this book provides insight into the covered bridge history of an area that has not been well documented in the past.

To order your signed copy, send $25.00 to:

Bill Caswell535 Second NH TurnpikeHillsboro, NH 03244.

* * *

New York State Covered Bridge Driving Tour Now Available! - Would you like to see all of New York State's Covered Bridges at your leisure
in the comfort of your own vehicle? Well now you can! The New York State Covered Bridge Driving Tour is a spiral bound, full color tour which includes turn by turn
directions and color photographs of each of New York's authentic and historic covered bridges. Included are the statistics on each bridge and an interesting history
of the bridge and the surrounding town, and old postcards of how the bridges looked during an earlier time.

Vermont Magazine Covered Bridge Notecard SetsThe work of Vermont artist Don Martin is shown in an 8 card set featuring
2 cards each of 4 different covered bridges. The cost is $9.95 for a packet of 8 cards with envelopes, plus $5.00 shipping. Add $1.00 shipping for
each additional packet. (Cards measure 4.5"x 6"). Visit the Vermont magazine online store at www.vermontmagazine.com.

* * *

Covered Bridges of Vermont Print - The Covered Bridges of Vermont features 19 photographs of covered bridges taken throughout the state
by photographer, and VCBS member, Ray Arsenault. The print is beautifully printed on professional high quality 100lb paper, and measures 18" x 26.5". Order now
at: www.coveredbridgesofvermont.com.

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Wanted: Reporter/correspondents to bring local covered bridge news to The Bridger.

Wendy Payson, of Southampton Massachusetts, recently joined our Society volunteering to take on the duties of the Events Committee, but when she received
her first issue of The Bridger and saw that we needed a Membership Committee Coordinator, she signed up for that, too!

Gloriosky! This has to be too good to be true, but it is. With an eye on increasing our membership, she has created a free Mail Chimp account (whatever
that is) and entered the VCBS into Facebook and Twitter, all with the objective of attracting young members. In addition to that, she has initiated a new page
on our website: www.vermontbridges.com/vcbs_members_page.htm.

For those of us who may not have access to the website, Wendy tells her readers: "As bridge enthusiasts, we are always looking for ways to spread the word
about the society, upcoming events, and ways in which people can get involved. In addition to quarterly newsletters, we will also be sending out periodic emails
to our members. We encourage members to forward these emails to anyone who might be interested, and perhaps they'll decide to join."

"Beyond these traditional ways of connecting, we are now reaching into the social media world. We've created a Facebook page and a Twitter account. Click on
either of these links to follow us - you'll be glad you did! Write on the Facebook wall. Share your stories and your news."

"It's great that we have so many members, but it would be wonderful to have even more. We welcome and encourage people from all generations and all walks of
life to join us. Do you have some ideas on how to reach out to people? In particular, we need help reaching out to the younger generations. Share your thoughts
via email or, better yet, join our emerging membership subcommittee."

"Share your thoughts. Ask your questions. Join the subcommittee. And most definitely, if you're not already a member, join the Society! For more information
on any of the above, please email Wendy Payson, Membership Committee Coordinator, at vermontcoveredbridgesociety@gmail.com

Wendy has hit the ground running. Let's give her all the support she needs.

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Many thanks to Irene Barna for a number of clippings about Vermont covered bridges, mostly from the Rutland Herald. We always want clippings or any other
information about the covered bridges to add to our archives. We would greatly appreciate members in other parts of Vermont to save any articles about the
covered bridges in their area. Also thanks to Joe Nelson for forwarding an item on the Bartonsville Bridge that appeared in the Washington (D.C.) Post.

Schoolhouse BridgeWGN 45-03-03

The Lyndon Academy and Graded School building was completed in 1872, and a new road (now part of South Wheelock Road) was built to directly connect the
new school with Lyndon. As part of the new road, a bridge was built across the South Wheelock Branch of the Passumpsic River. This bridge was said not to be
a covered bridge.

There are two stories relating the origin of the present Schoolhouse Bridge. One story simply says the the open 1872 bridge was covered in 1879, and is
today's bridge. The other story is that the 1872 bridge was both expensive and poorly built, and "a specimen of the architecture of the dark ages", which was
replaced with the present Schoolhouse Bridge in 1879.

The bridge is a single-span truss about 42 feet in length. The truss is boarded from both sides, and is not visible, but the bridge is probably a Queenpost
truss, in common with other bridges of similar size in the Lyndon area. When built, the bridge had a sidewalk on each side, but only the one on the north remains
today. The appearance of the bridge shows a very graceful symmetry, and was likened by Herbert Wheaton Congdon to a "bird poised to take wing". The appearance
was marred at some point, probably in the 1950s, when the Selectmen ordered the portals to be squared off, so larger trucks could use the bridge.

The bridge was nearly lost during the 1927 flood. Flood water and water-borne debris piled up against the bridge and tipped it almost to the point of falling
from the abutments. As the flood water receded the bridge settled back down with no serious damage.

The bridge was threatened in the early 1970s by the construction of I-91 and the interchange at Lyndon. Fortunately the original plans for the interstate
were altered enough so the bridge could be saved, though that part of South Wheelock Road was relocated to the north. The bridge was restored to its original
appearance, painted white, and now sits in a small park.

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About Montgomery, Vermontby Joe Nelson

Montgomery, Vermont, named for Revolutionary War hero Richard Montgomery of New York, was chartered in October, 1789. General Montgomery had commanded
American forces under Schuyler in the expedition against Canada. The Americans took Montreal but were defeated in front of Quebec City, where Montgomery
was killed.

The Town of Montgomery is home to six wooden bridges, all built by the brothers Savanna and Sheldon Jewett over a period of about thirty years. In all,
the Jewetts built nine plank lattice bridges in the Montgomery area. They used timber from the family farm on West Hill and dressed the lumber in their own
mill.

The northern edge of the Green Mountain chain rises around the Town of Montgomery on three sides. The valleys among the foothills are laced with small
rivers and streams. Fed in the spring by melting mountain snows and in the summer by the frequent rains that make the Green Mountains green, the streams
usually keep mill ponds filled for much of the year. With a wealth of water power and accessible softwood forests, Montgomery became a town of mills, turning
spruce, beech, birch, maple, and hemlock into sap buckets and butter tubs, bobbins and veneer.

Factories sprang up by the streams, sharing the waters. The peak growth years for the mills stretched from the 1860s into the 1890s, the years the Jewetts
built their bridges. Each new mill created the need to cross the stream that powered it, so the boom years of mill construction led to a flurry of bridge
building as well.

There are two settlements in the town, about two miles apart - Montgomery Village and Montgomery Center. Montgomery Center, the seat of the town government,
was a mill town. The most famous enterprise may have been the Nelson and Hall Company veneer factory. Nelson and Hall operated the mill that made the veneer
for the Victrola Company's cabinets. The mill-works used to stand across the Trout River from the Route 118 bridge near the junction of Route 242. A scattering
of other mills operated along the South Branch of the Trout River. Jewett-built covered bridges stand near two of the old mill sites south of town.

White painted portals and splash-panels give the three bridges in and near Montgomery Village a clean and cared-for look. The Fuller Bridge, the Comstock
Bridge and the Longley Bridge are each named with wooden cutout letters placed high on the gable-ends, additional evidence of tender loving care. Except for
the addition of distribution beams tie-bolted under the decks of all three bridges, the structure of the bridges remains as the builders left them. A fourth
span, the Creamery Bridge, is unpainted, but like all of Montgomery's covered bridges, it is marked with a signboard testifying to the Jewett's craftsmanship
and the year of construction.

The Tub Factory

It would be wrong to think of the Hutchins Bridge's history as idyllic and bucolic. This was a busy spot in 1883, as the moss-covered foundations just south
of the west portal reveal. Here, Joseph Hutchins' five-lathe factory produced 2,000 butter tubs a day. The bridge resounded with the arrival of the mill workers
at dawn, and again with their departure at dusk. Teams of horses clattered through, bringing logs of spruce, hemlock, and basswood, and other teams took the
completed butter tubs away. The bustle stopped only when night fell. Over the years, as industry and society changed, the activity waned, until it finally
stopped altogether when the factory shut its doors for good.

[These articles are from Spanning Time; Vermont's Covered Bridges]

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First, I'd like to introduce myself. My name is Wendy Payson, and I'm from Southampton, Massachusetts. I just joined the VCBS, and I volunteered to be
the membership coordinator. I have always loved covered bridges, and I am very excited to be a member of your organization.

It's wonderful that there are so many members of VCBS, but it would be even more wonderful if we could increase the membership. In particular, it seems
important to find ways to reach out to the younger population. Perhaps a Facebook page? Perhaps through some other social media outlet? Perhaps you have some
ideas. I am looking to form a membership subcommittee whose task is to reach out to potential new members, with a special focus on the younger population. If
you're interested in being on this committee, please contact me at wpayson@gmail.com